JohnnyCash-remixed-1

johnny-cash-closeup-11

jcash-inwhite

johnnycashathome-young

1955

Cry, Cry, Cry (Johnny Cash)

1. track from Cash’s debut album Johnny Cash with His Hot and Blue Guitar

2. 1961 performance preceded by a brief interview

1956

johnnycash-walkthelineI Walk the Line

(from wikipedia) – The song is very simple and like most Cash songs, the lyrics tell more of a story than the music conveys. (You’ve got a way to keep me on your side/You give me cause for love that I can’t hide/For you I know I’d even try to turn the tide).

I Walk the Line is based upon the “boom-chicka-boom” or “freight train” rhythm common in many of Cash’s songs. In the original recording of the song, there is a key change between each of the five verses, and Cash hums the new root note before singing each verse. The final verse, a reprise of the first, is sung a full octave lower than the first verse. According to Cash, he loved the sound of a snare drum, but drums were not used on country music back then, so he placed a piece of paper in his guitar strings and created his own unique “snare drum”. From that point onwards, at many concerts, Cash would tell the story and perform the song the same way.

The unique chord progression for the song was inspired by an accidental backwards playback on Cash’s tape recorder while he was in the Air Force. Later, he wrote the lyrics in a backstage dressing room in Gladewater, Texas in 1955, after a discussion with fellow performer Carl Perkins encouraged him to adopt “I Walk the Line” as the song title. Cash originally intended the song as a slow ballad, but producer Sam Phillips preferred a faster arrangement, which Cash grew to like as the uptempo recording met with success.

a. Performed on television show Tex Ritter’s Ranch Party with the Tennessee Two which consists of Luther Perkins on lead guitar and Marshall Grant, upright bass, 1956.

b. 1964

So Doggone Lonesome (Cash)- Johnny Cash and the Tennessee Two on Ranch Party show around 1957

Get Rhythm (Cash) Also from the Ranch Party, late 50’s (the youtube provider tsukka says “somewhere around 1955-58″)accompanied by the Tennessee Two.

Folsom Prison Blues - by Johnny Cash (credited) and Gerdon Jenkins (uncredited)

Cash was inspired to write this song after seeing the movie Inside the Walls of Folsom Prison (1951) while serving in West Germany in the United States Air Force. Cash recounted how he came up with the “Reno” line: “I sat with my pen in my hand, trying to think up the worst reason a person could have for killing another person, and that’s what came to mind.”[1]

Another source for the song was Gordon Jenkins’s 1953 Seven Dreams concept album, specifically the song Crescent City Blues[2]. Cash used the same melody, and borrowed many of the lyrics without crediting or getting permission from Jenkins when he recorded the song, now entitled with his trio in 1955 for the Sun Records label. Jenkins later filed an infringement lawsuit and received a settlement after Cash’s 1968 live recording achieved widespread success.

Town Hall Party, Los Angeles, California August 8, 1959

1957

Home of the Blues – on Country Style USA, 1957

1958

Big River (Cash)

1. television performance, 1965 (I think)

2. Grand Ole Opry, 1962

Cash departed Sun Records in 1958 to sign a contract with Columbia where he continued to write and record hits. His first hit for Columbia, one of his best-selling songs, was Don’t Take Your Guns to Town.

1959

Don’t Take Your Guns to Town (Cash)

Five Feet High and Risin (Cash) – performed around 1965

johnnycash-hissunyears-dwonsouth

The  link below (arrow) will play the album Johnny Cash, his Sun Years: Down South- CD 1 (of 3), released in 2006. I’ve been told it can’t be accessed out of the US. Don’t know why, but I’ll try to find an alternative service that will play no matter where you access it from.  The track list follows the photos.

Play Here:   His Sun Years: Down South – CD1 by Johnny Cash

Track list for His Sun Years: Down South

1. Two Timin’ Woman – 1:57
2. Folsom Prison Blues – 2:48
3. Luther Played The Boogie -2:04
4. Mean Eyed Cat – 2:29
5. Big River – 2:32
6. Blue Train -2:02
7. Fools Hall Of Fame -2:23
8. Wide Open Road -2:24
9. Cry! Cry! Cry! -2:26
10. Hey! Porter -2:13
11. Get Rhythm -2:14
12. I Love You Because -2:24
13. I Forgot To Remember To Forget -1:52
14. Train Of Love -2:23
15. Goodnight Irene -2:40
16. Doin’ My Time -2:36
17. Rock Island Line -2:09
18. The Wreck Of The Old ‘97 -1:47
19. Belshazzar -2:24
20. I Was There When It Happened-2:13

0 Responses to “Johnny Cash: early hits, 1955-59”



  1. No Comments Yet

Leave a Reply




wordpress visitor